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Recently, DUSK's performance has been quite eye-catching📈.
Imagine a scenario: every transaction you make on the chain is automatically encrypted, so your counterparties cannot see the amount or identity information, but audit agencies can still access it when needed, and regulators can follow up. It sounds like some kind of black magic, but there are indeed projects pushing in this direction.
DUSK positions itself as the underlying infrastructure for financial privacy, with the core selling point being this privacy + audit-compatible technical framework. For institutions and builders concerned about on-chain financial sensitivity, this logic isn't unfamiliar, but few projects have actually implemented it.
Will DUSK become the next dark horse? It certainly has the technical foundation; the key lies in three points: the actual speed of compliance solution implementation, whether institutions are willing to truly adopt it, and whether the ecosystem can be built successfully. In the short term, it depends on whether there are substantial breakthroughs in cooperation progress; in the long term, it depends on whether it can become an institutional-grade financial privacy infrastructure. The potential of the track is there, it all depends on execution.
Wait, will institutions really use it? That's the real question.
DUSK has the technology, but what about the ecosystem? How to break through?
If this wave of cooperation can make substantial progress, it will be worth paying attention to.
The compliance and privacy track will eventually be taken on by someone; it depends on whether DUSK can do it.
By the way, do institutions really buy into this? It still feels like an unknown.
Privacy infrastructure sounds high-end, but the execution part is very complex.
DUSK has a good idea, but implementation is the real challenge.